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Movies That Made Me Gay: A Memoir Of Watching Films

Movies That Made Me Gay: A Memoir Of Watching Films

In his new book Movies That Made Me Gay, novelist Larry Duplechan writes about the movies he loves, and a few that he doesn’t…

By David-Elijah Nahmod

Novelist Larry Duplechan loves movies. Movies have shaped his life. They were his solace when he was growing up in a conservative Christian household and they helped him define himself as a skinny gay Black kid who didn’t fully understand why he was different. Movies continue to be a major part of his life, in particular classic films from Hollywood’s Golden Age. 

In his new book Movies That Made Me Gay, Duplechan writes about the movies he loves, and a few that he doesn’t. Each year he and his husband have seasonal film festivals in their home. The book’s chapters are titled according to those festivals: Black History Month, Pride Month, Halloween, etc. In Black History Month he recalls Hollywood films of the 1930s and 40s, a time when Black performers like Lena Horne would do a stand-alone musical number in a film without being included in the film’s plot. This would enable racist theater owners in the American South to cut these numbers out of the film without affecting the film’s storyline. Duplechan eloquently writes about Black performers who toiled away during those segregated years, rarely getting the recognition they deserved.

In Pride Month, he writes about some of his favorite LGBT films. In Halloween, he writes about horror films, including 1935’s gay-coded chiller Bride of Frankenstein and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Through it all he shares snippets of his life, such as where he was and who he was with when he first saw a film and how that person affected him.

Duplechan isn’t afraid to make controversial statements. He likes Gone With the Wind but is less fond of Moonlight. He thinks that Joan Crawford was too old to play Crystal Allen in 1939’s The Women, a film loved by many gay men of a certain age. And he doesn’t hesitate to say that transwomen of color didn’t throw the first brick at Stonewall. He’s not worried about backlash from the community.

“We currently live in a world where if you say something often enough and loud enough, it becomes an alternative fact,” Duplechan said in an interview with IN Magazine. “I am not in favor of alternative facts and I don’t like to see history rewritten to make a snappier meme. Placing two inarguably heroic figures at an event they simply weren’t at is bad history. Marsha P. Johnson said herself that she didn’t get to the riot until it was well underway, and it’s unclear whether Sylvia Rivera got there at all. They both did great work for queer liberation. But they did it in the days, weeks and years after Stonewall. To claim otherwise, well, among other things it disrespects the people who were actually there.”

In the book Duplechan mentions books and documentary films about the Stonewall Uprising, and he encourages people to check them out.

“If someone wants to backlash me, there’s nothing I can do to stop them,” he said. “But facts are facts. You wouldn’t want me to accept that the 2020 US Presidential election was stolen or that slavery was good for Black people. So why expect me to accept Marsha threw the first brick just because some people want it that way?”

Duplechan spoke of what went into his process of choosing which films to write about, such as movies he’s loved since childhood, like The Wizard of Oz, Mary Poppins, and Funny Girl. There are movies that spoke to his budding sexual identity as a teenager, like Cabaret, the classic 1972 musical which touched upon themes of homosexuality. 

“And movies that came out when I was a young man, that portrayed gay people as we hadn’t been portrayed when I was a child,” he said. Making Love, The Boys in the Band. And where there are remakes, or based-ons, I talk about them if only for a sense of, I don’t know, closure or something. Which is how The Wiz got in, for instance.”

The first third of the book deals with the racism and sexism that appeared in many Hollywood films. The rest of the book is about the holiday film festivals Duplechan enjoyed with his husband, like Pride Month, Halloween, etc.

“And those choices were super easy because, well, there they were,” Duplechan said. “A stack of DVDs and Blu Ray discs. I wrote the Halloween and Christmas sections pretty much in real time, writing about The Santa Clause and Home Alone as we watched them in December 2022.”

Movies That Made Me Gay came about when Duplechan retired from his secretarial job in 2021. Writing a memoir was on his retirement to-do list. And, having seen several relatives of his parents’ generation succumb to dementia, he wanted to get some memories written down while he still remembered them. The result is a book that is at once light, fun, and thought provoking. It’s an easy read, the perfect gift for the film buff you love.

“Unfortunately, I made the mistake of publishing a memoir concurrently with Barbra Streisand,” Duplechan said. “Babs didn’t warn me.” 

Movies That Made Me Gay is available in Canada as an Amazon e-book. The paperback can be ordered from Barnes and Noble.

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